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Teaching games and sport for understanding: Exploring and reconsidering its
relevance in physical education

Article  in  European Physical Education Review · January 2013


DOI: 10.1177/1356336X13496001

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Article

European Physical Education Review


2014, Vol. 20(1) 36–71
Teaching games and sport ª The Author(s) 2013
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DOI: 10.1177/1356336X13496001
epe.sagepub.com
Exploring and
reconsidering its relevance
in physical education
Steven Stolz
La Trobe University, Australia

Shane Pill
Flinders University, Australia

Abstract
Over 30 years ago the original teaching games for understanding (TGfU) proposition was published
in a special edition of the Bulletin of Physical Education (Bunker and Thorpe, 1982). In that time
TGfU has attracted significant attention from a theoretical and pedagogical perspective as an
improved approach to games and sport teaching in physical education (PE). It has been particularly
championed as a superior alternative to what Kirk (2010) and Metzler (2011) described as a
traditional method. Recently, however, one of the TGfU authors suggested that the TGfU premise
needs to be revisited in order to explore and rethink its relevance so that pedagogy in PE again
becomes a central and practical issue for PE (Almond, 2010), as it has not been as well accepted by
PE teachers as it has by academics. In order to review and revisit TGfU and consider its relevance
to games and sport teaching in PE this paper outlines two areas of the TGfU proposition: (1) the
basis for the conceptualisation of TGfU; (2) advocacy of TGfU as nuanced versions. The empirical-
scientific research surrounding TGfU and student learning in PE contexts is reviewed and analysed.
This comprehensive review has not been undertaken before. The data-driven research will facil-
itate a consideration as to how TGfU practically assists the physical educator improve games and
sport teaching. The review of the research literature highlighted the inconclusive nature of the
TGfU proposition and brought to attention the disparity between researcher as theory generator
and teacher practitioner as theory applier. If TGfU is to have improved relevance for teachers of PE
more of an emphasis needs to be placed on the normative characteristics of pedagogy that drive
this practice within curricula.

Corresponding author:
Steven Stolz, Faculty of Education, La Trobe University, PO Box 199 Bendigo 3552, Victoria, Australia.
Email: S.Stolz@latrobe.edu.au

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Stolz and Pill 37

Keywords
Teaching games for understanding (TGfU), teaching, physical education (PE), research

Introduction
This paper aims to revisit Bunker and Thorpe’s (1982) teaching of games for understanding (TGfU)
approach in physical education (PE). Since its inception as a model, the TGfU approach has been the
subject of significant attention from theoretical, research, advocacy and practical perspectives. The
review of the literature highlights how the TGfU model has been the catalyst for a global movement
involving games teaching that has spawned a diverse array of derivations around the world. Although
Bunker and Thorpe intended to challenge the status quo of what has now become known as a
‘traditional’ (Hoffman, 1971; Kirk, 2010; Metzler, 2011) approach to teaching games and sport in
PE, a closer look at the literature will show competing discourses vying for dominance in the PE
games literature (see for example, Metzler, 2011). For instance, recent research would suggest that
curriculum and pedagogical elements associated with Game Sense (den Duyn, 1996, 1997), which is
an Australian version of TGfU, are not considered by teachers as unique to a TGfU framework, or of
themselves defining of a TGfU approach because they are simply good pedagogical practice for sport
related game teaching (Pill, 2011a). This is a theme picked up by Hopper et al. (2009), who noted that
TGfU was not initially presented as a new innovation, rather an organisation and application of peda-
gogy that had not previously been made coherent.
For the purposes of this paper we will be concerned with the critical discussion of two issues: first,
we provide a brief historical overview of the conceptual approach commonly known as TGfU in
order to highlight how this model has spawned major iterations that may appear to be different, but
on closer inspection are defined by subtle rather than distinctive differences, some of which clarify
aspects of the original TGfU proposition; and second, in order to verify these claims we adopt a
similar methodology to Wallhead and O’Sullivan (2005) in which a total of 76 publications per-
taining to the TGfU model were collected and segregated into two categories: theoretical (n ¼ 40)
and data-based empirical-scientific studies (n ¼ 36). The review of the non-empirical-scientific lit-
erature demonstrated the global dissemination and nuanced interpretations of TGfU since its original
description in the themed edition of the Bulletin of Physical Education in 1982. The contradictory
nature of the empirical-scientific literature, especially the attempt to capture TGfU as ‘good’ peda-
gogical practice, is revealed in the empirical-scientific literature summarised later in Table 2. The
empirical-scientific data is inconclusive as to whether TGfU enhances games teaching and learning.
This is unlike the theoretical literature, which advocates and explains TGfU as an improvement upon
traditional (Kirk, 2010; Metzler, 2011) and in many cases still normative ‘technical’ (Kirk, 2010) and
‘linear’ (Chow, et al., 2007) pedagogical practice. The assumptions of the theoretical literature about
TGfU pedagogy and comparisons with a traditional PE method (Metzler, 2011) will be explained in
the literature review following this introduction. It is anticipated that this paper will generate further
discussion and research surrounding games and sport pedagogy and learning in PE, which the results
of this research reveal are far from resolved.

Literature review
TGfU: a brief historical overview
A paradigm shift from the drill as the dominant approach to sport-related games teaching began
in the 1960s that influenced the later pedagogical elements of TGfU. Wade (1967) proposed a

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38 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

Table 1. Ellis (1983) game categories.

Territory Games - Goal (Football)


Line (Rugby)
Target Games - Opposed (Lawn Bowls)
Unopposed (Golf)
Court Games - Net (Volleyball)
Shared (Squash)
Field - Fan (Softball)
Oval (Cricket)

small-sided games framework for the combined purpose of teaching technical and tactical attack
and defence skills of football (soccer). The small-sided games framework Wade proposed involved
the minimum possible number of players for a competitive small-sided game. Small-sided modi-
fied games became a central feature of the TGfU model. Also in the late 1960s, Mosston (1968)
described the Spectrum of Teaching Styles. The Spectrum of Teaching Styles instructional strate-
gies guided PE teachers towards the purposeful choice of pedagogical action to meet specific
teaching objectives (Mosston, 1981). The guided discovery style explained by Mosston is not
unlike the TGfU emphasis on teacher questioning to both prompt examination of a target game
concept and focus game understanding.
Mauldon and Redfern (1969) suggested that physical educators should not call a person educated
who has simply mastered a skill and presented a new approach for games teaching. Mauldon and
Redfern’s new approach (1969) contained three elements: (1) game categories to group games of
similar nature so that teaching for conceptual and skill transfer between similar games could occur; (2)
game analysis by players so that players were prompted to develop game appreciation and under-
standing; and (3) structured situations for player experimentation and problem solving. They proposed
that all games contained one or more of three elements: (1) sending an object away; (2) gaining
possession of an object; and (3) travelling with an object. These elements were used to group games
into three categories: (a) net games; b) batting games; and (c) running games. The purpose of the game
classification was to assist the process of game analysis for player development of game appreciation,
and to assist teaching for skill and knowledge transfer between games. These features are also present
as emphasised pedagogical themes in the description of TGfU (Bunker and Thorpe, 1982).
Game classification was later refined to four categories and eight sub-categories by Ellis (1983)
(Table 1).
Despite these developments in games and sport teaching, games teaching in secondary PE
continued to be structured as sport-as-techniques in highly structured lessons (Kirk, 2010). The
decontextualised nature of learning skills as motor patterns isolated from the movement–informa-
tion coupling of the game meant that students’ experiences of sport were not authentic (Savels-
bergh et al., 2003). Some suggested that a large percentage of students completed the
compulsory years of schooling and participation in PE achieving very little success, and knowing
very little about games and sport (Bunker and Thorpe 1982, Siedentop 1994).

TGfU: an approach for improved games teaching?


In 1982, TGfU proposed that the games teaching emphasis be placed on understanding the logic of
play imposed by the rules of the game, and that appreciation of the tactical structure of play be

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Stolz and Pill 39

learnt before highly structured technique teaching was proposed (Bunker and Thorpe, 1982). It
emerged as a counter to the perceived shortcomings for student learning inherent in the highly
structured sport-as-techniques (Kirk, 2010) traditional PE method (Metzler, 2011) in secondary
PE. The model now known as TGfU continued the evolution of the small-sided games approach
(Werner et al., 1996) while outlining a sequential cycle of teaching based on the premise that game
understanding and decision making was not dependent on the prior development of sport specific
movement techniques.
Just as Mauldon and Redfern’s (1969) approach challenged the curriculum and pedagogical
practice of PE, TGfU challenged traditional PE method ‘of progression as an additive process by
proposing that children could learn to play modified versions of games ahead of mastering the
mature skills’ (Kirk, 2010: 85). The six-step TGfU cycle of teaching assumed that students learn
best if they understand what to do before they understand how to do it (Griffin et al., 2005: 215). As
already indicated, the TGfU model combined features of earlier departures from the PE method.
However, it was the clear articulation of guiding pedagogical principles (Bunker and Thorpe,
1982) and theoretical support from the perspective of cognitive educational psychology (Pigott,
1982) that was perhaps significant to the models subsequent academic acceptance.
The distinctiveness of the TGfU model is sometimes suggested as belonging with its guiding
pedagogical principles (Thorpe et al., 1984). These are as follows (Thorpe et al., 1986: 164–167):

1. Sampling: The use of modified games and sport as a way to experience adult versions of
games;
2. Exaggeration: Changing game structures, such as rules, equipment and play space, to promote,
exaggerate, control or eliminate certain game behaviours to enable teaching through the game;
3. Representation: Small-sided modified games structured to suit the age and/or experience of
the players; and
4. Questioning: Prompting student thinking and problem solving by questions so that knowl-
edge of what to do, when to do it and why to do it develops and leads to the question of how
to perform movement in the context of play.

However, these pedagogical elements were already advocated as advances in games teaching.
What TGfU approach accomplished was the organisation of the pedagogy into a coherent pro-
position (Thorpe et al., 1986).
Since Bunker and Thorpe’s (1982) original description and explanation of the TGfU approach
and further elaboration (Bunker and Thorpe, 1983; Thorpe et al., 1986), it has been advocated as
nuanced interpretations. This growth reflected similar concerns to overcome problems of: (1)
isolated (from the game) direct teaching of skill drills and defining of skills as techniques; (2)
perceptions that student motivation in games teaching is low; and (3) the absence of relevance of
PE to the achievement of educational outcomes (López et al., 2009). The next section of the paper
briefly summarises the advocacy of TGfU occurring through the major interpretations of TGfU
occurring in the PE literature.

Developing TGfU globally: the major iterations


Tactical Games. The Tactical Games approach (Griffin et al., 1997; Mitchell et al., 2003, 2006)
simplified the six-step teaching and learning cycle of TGfU into a three-step cycle to make it easier
for teachers to understand the learning process (Figure 1). The Tactical Games model also

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40 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

Game Form

(Representation, Exaggeration)

Tactical Awareness Skill Execution

What to do? How to do it?

Figure 1. Tactical Games approach.

introduced a structured progression through levels of sport skill learning to provide a ‘complete
package for teaching’ (Mitchell et al., 2006: 5) for middle and secondary school PE that was miss-
ing from the TGfU literature. The benefit of such an approach for teachers was that they did not
have to be as reliant on developing sport-specific domain knowledge across a broad range of dif-
ferent sports. Questions to guide the development of game understanding and skill practices during
lessons were focussed through an overarching tactical problem.
As Figure 1 illustrates, the Tactical Games approach did not change the tactical-before-technical
linear teaching cycle of the original TGfU proposition. However, a substantial addition to the peda-
gogy of TGfU was the description of an assessment tool that accounted for on-the-ball and off-the-
ball game play, known as the Games Performance Assessment Instrument (GPAI). The GPAI
enabled codification of tactical decision making, off-the-ball movement to read and respond, and
on-the-ball reaction and then recovery to a position for further game involvement (Hopper, 2003).
Seven components of game performance were defined in the GPAI to provide flexibility and adapt-
ability of the instrument across TGfU game categories (Mitchell et al., 2006).

Game Sense. The term ‘Game Sense’ was used by Thorpe and West in 1969 as a description of
game intelligence and as a games teaching performance measure. However, Game Sense is more
commonly recognised as emerging from the field of sport coaching in Australia. In 1993,
Charlesworth described Game Sense as the objective of player development at the elite sport
level. He described Designer Games (Charlesworth, 1993, 1994) as the structure to achieve the
combining of specific technical, tactical and fitness training in a game practice that simulates
game conditions to develop player game sense. The idea of Game Sense developed into a sport
teaching approach during a series of visits by Rod Thorpe to Australia in the mid 1990s to work
with the Australian Sports Commission (Thorpe, 2012). A player-centred model (Schembri,
2005) to develop the tactical and technical foundations of sport through a game-centred training
structure was described (den Duyn, 1996, 1997; Thorpe, 1997). Thorpe (2006) has described the
Game Sense model as incorporating more than the original TGfU model (Kidman, 2005: 233),
and so the Game Sense model may be justifiably seen as a further refinement of TGfU for sport
skill teaching.
The central focus of the Game Sense approach is the development of thinking players (den
Duyn, 1997). This objective for sport teaching is pursued via the coupling of movement tech-
nique to game context as skilled performance; or, as den Duyn (1997) described, Technique þ

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Stolz and Pill 41

Technique + Game Context = Skill

Figure 2. Game Sense (den Duyn, 1997).

Game Categories

Invasion Court Field Territory

1. Game

2. Game Appreciation 1. Learner 6. Performance

3. Tactical Awareness 4. Making Appropriate 5. Skill Execution


Decisions

What to do? How to do it?

Figure 3. The teaching games for understanding (TGfU) approach.

Game Context ¼ Skill (Figure 2). The original Game Sense description did not elaborate the
teaching of game appreciation and understanding before a focus on the refinement of skill
execution, but discussed the development of technical and tactical game components as being
taught together. This was a fine distinction but a departure from the six-step TGfU tactical-
before-technical cycle of learning where game appreciation occurs before technique develop-
ment (Figure 3).
Similar to the TGfU (and Tactical Games) model, small-sided games and the use of questioning
to develop tactical game understanding were central to the pedagogy of a Game Sense approach.
Also similar to the Tactical Games model, a thematic curriculum for the teaching of sport skill
foundations based on the TGfU game categories emerged, elaborated via the Game Sense Cards
(Australian Sports Commission, 1999a) and then the Active After Schools Playing for Life kit

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42 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

(Australian Sports Commission, 2005). The Game Sense cards were similar to the Playsport mini-
games instructional cards designed by Rod Thorpe (Thorpe, 2006).
Similar to TGfU’s initial articulation, Game Sense did not initially distinguish between small-
sided games for fundamental sport skill learning and small-sided game play for more complex tac-
tical and technical skill learning. It was later refined into a three-stage curriculum model aligned to
the continuum of achievement evident in Australian Health and PE curriculum frameworks, and
the general direction of Côté et al.’s (2003) developmental model of sport participation as Play
with Purpose (Pill, 2007).

Play Practice. Game Sense also forms part of the Play Practice approach (Launder, 2001). The Play
Practice approach, however, explains Game Sense as one of several elements required for suc-
cessful game involvement. Similar to Charlesworth’s (1993, 1994) description of Designer Games,
Play Practice positions Game Sense as a sport-teaching/coaching objective. Like Designer Games,
Play Practices could be seen as activities that sit within a Game Sense approach, alongside skill
drills and other instructional strategies, used to teach individual and group situational skills and
decision making in ‘time-outs’ between small-sided game play and match simulation via Designer
Games.
The Play Practice pedagogy of shaping the play to suit the experience of players, focussing the play
on learning sport skills, and enhancing play by directing attention to any elements of play requiring
improvement (Launder, 2001) are conceptually similar to the TGfU pedagogy of teaching through the
game and directing learning by sampling, exaggerating and representation of game structures. Like
TGfU, Tactical Games and Game Sense models, Play Practice pedagogy encouraged teachers to adopt
a broad range of instructional strategies to achieve task objectives; however, there is no obvious
emphasis on the development of ‘thinking players’ by guided discovery using questioning as a central
pedagogical tool as there is in the TGfU, Game Sense and Tactical Games models.

Invasion games competency model. In the invasion games competency model (IGCM) players
progress through a sequential series of basic game forms (modified games) growing in complexity
as they master the objectives of each game form. A game situation is the starting point for lessons,
and the introductory game is designed to relate the tactical and technical elements of the situation
to the players. Similar to other versions of TGfU, when using the IGCM teachers are encouraged to
monitor the play for tactical problems and intervene to stop the game where appropriate to question
players, thereby encouraging players to think about the aim of the game. Once players recognise
the need for new skills or skill refinement, practice occurs (Tallir et al., 2004, 2005).

Tactical decision learning model. The tactical decision learning model (T-DLM) focusses on student
exploration of the various possibilities of game play and on the construction of adequate movement
responses in small-sided invasion games (Grehaigne et al., 2005a). After experiencing the game,
teams propose action plans (game plans) which are then tried out in play and progressively refined
as players develop more sophisticated understanding of the relationship between the action plan
and the game rules (Grehaigne and Godbout, 1995). Once stabilisation of game understanding
appears to have taken place, the teacher increases the complexity of the game, and eventually intro-
duces another team sport to initiate generalisation of game understanding across sports (Grehaigne
et al., 2005b). Similar to the Tactical Games approach emphasis on data collection, observational
assessment and the collection of qualitative and quantitative feedback are central to the T-DLM.
This data collection may occur through the tracking of player movement using descriptive drawing

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Stolz and Pill 43

and statistical measures such as the Team Sport Assessment Instrument. This instrument contains
assessment criteria to account for players’ specific behaviours during game play (Grehaigne and
Godbout 1997, 1998; Grehaigne et al.2005a).
TGfU is also familiar in Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, Macau, Japan and Korea (Liu, 2010), and
in Singapore it is known as the Games Concept Approach (Light and Tan, 2006).

Theoretical framework used to organise the literature review


Adopting a similar methodology to Wallhead and O’Sullivan (2005), initial articles and papers
were sourced by a key word search in Google Scholar utilising TGfU, teaching games for
understanding, tactical games and game sense and physical education. From the initial searches
additional articles, papers and books were sourced through citations and references.
The review of literature revealed four sub-categories of TGfU publication. The first type of pub-
lication consisted of theories of sport teaching and learning. The publications discussed the tenets of a
model of sport or games teaching and the pedagogical content knowledge (Shulman, 1987). Issues
addressed within this type of literature include the cycle of learning (Bunker and Thorpe, 1982; Grif-
fin et al., 1997; Mitchell et al., 2006), pedagogical strategies (Bell, 2003; den Duyn, 1997; Grehaigne
et al., 2005a; Griffin et al., 1997; Launder, 2001; Mitchell et al., 2006, Pill, 2007, 2011b; Piltz, 2003),
and the application of TGfU to sport skill-teaching pedagogy (Breed and Spittle, 2011; Charlesworth,
1993; den Duyn, 1997; Grehaigne et al., 2005b; Griffin et al., 1997; Hopper, 1998; Launder, 2001;
Mitchell et al., 2006; Schembri 2005). This literature also included examples of how to implement
teaching games and sport for understanding in school and coaching contexts.
The second category of publication included advocacy for teaching games and sport for
understanding for a better practice of sport teaching and coaching. The publications elaborated on
the assumptions and assertions of efficacy of the descriptions of the TGfU models being imple-
mented around the world (Chow et al., 2007; Kirk et al., 2000; Launder and Piltz, 2006; Pigott,
1982; Pill, 2010; Piltz, 2002; Renshaw et al., 2010; Thorpe, 1997) and the personal experience of
the authors with the model (Butler and McCahan, 2005; Kirk et al., 2000; Light et al., 2005). This
type of publication asserted enhanced student learning and games teaching resulting from the
adoption of the pedagogical and content tenets of a TGfU-style curriculum based on theories of
skill learning or the authors’ experience of games teaching.
The third category of publication included the perspective of the practitioner. It included the
data driven studies evaluating the limits, constraints and possibilities of teaching games and sport
for understanding on various dimensions of sport learning, the achievement of curriculum out-
comes and design and implementation of curriculum. It would not be appropriate to make state-
ments regarding the advantages of models without reviewing the empirical-scientific literature
(Chandler and Mitchell, 1990; López et al., 2009). The results of the literature review are contained
in Table 2 and discussed in detail later in the paper.
The fourth category of publication dealt with the implementation of teaching games and sport
for understanding into the coursework and tertiary education experiences directed at pre-service
teacher pedagogical content knowledge (Forrest et al., 2006; Howarth and Walkuski, 2003;
Howarth, 2005; Light, 2003; Light and Georgakis, 2005; Pill, 2009; Sweeney et al., 2003). The
narrative of this research is that pre-service teachers are attracted to the model but find the peda-
gogical content knowledge required to implement the theoretical model into practice troublesome,
which as a result limits feelings of efficacy with the model. The intention in this paper is not to

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44
Table 2. General overview of literature review.

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

TGfU Butler, 1996 Teachers are Ten teachers working Quantitative data provided by Positive outcomes
interviewed about across Years 3–11, Cheffers’ adaption of Flanders’ - More teacher questions at a higher cognitive level
attractions and ranging in teaching Interaction Analysis System, - The focus of the lesson changed from executing
drawbacks of the experience from 7– Individual Ration Gestalt, Teachers skills to understanding tactics
tactical approach 30 years, teaching Performance Criteria - The teacher’s focus changed from a concern with
activities of choice Questionnaire, and an analysis of control to student learning
teacher questioning (coding of Concerns
video of teaching). - Students need to learn skills before they can play a
Qualitative data provided by game
individual participant interviews - Strategies need to be learnt under the guidance of
the teacher
- The execution of skills is more easily evaluated than
the concepts of TGfU
- The technical model offers greater control over
students
- The teacher’s role is to transmit knowledge
- TGfU is only suitable for older students, or the
emotionally mature and highly motivated
- Cognitive focus comes at the expense of the
physical

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TGfU Turner, 1996 Examining the validity of 24 Year 6 and 24 Year 7 Henry–Friedel Field Hocket Test pre  No significant differences in skill development
the TGfU approach students assigned to test and post test, 30-item multiple between TGfU and technique groups on the skill test
by comparing it with four teaching groups choice knowledge test, and a  TGfU improved significantly more than technique
the technique of 12 students coding of game decisions (control, group for declarative knowledge
approach undertook a field decision making, execution) during  TGfU group improved significantly more than
hockey unit game play and participant technique group in control and decision making in
interviews game play
 The interview data indicated game-related activities
provided the most enjoyment

(continued)
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

TGfU French et al., The effects of a 3-week 48 Year 9 students Badminton knowledge, skill and game  The tactical group accessed more action concepts
1996 skill, tactical or com- randomly selected play (videotaping), and use of during the game than the skill or combination groups
bined tactical and skill from a cohort of knowledge during performance
instruction on approx 90 students, were quantitatively analysed
performance with 12 students
assigned to three
treatment groups and
a control group
TGfU French et al., The effects of a 6-week 52 students from three Quantitative analysis of skill and  The skill and tactical group exhibited better
1996 skill, tactical or com- Year 9 badminton knowledge tests, observation of performance than other groups on important
bined tactical and skill classes assigned to game play and planning interviews measures of game play
instruction on three treatment during game play  The skill group performed decision components of
performance groups and a control performance as well as the tactical group
group  The combination group exhibited poorer
performance on cognitive (game decisions) and skill
components of performance than the skill or tactical

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groups
 Cognitive representations of badminton skill
developed differently in each group; the tactical group
responded with general tactical statements whereas
the skill and combination groups used more specific
statements about shot selection and execution

(continued)

45
46
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

TGfU Alison and Compare effectiveness 40 year 9 boys and 56 Quantitative analysis of students’ pre  TGfU groups improved skill development more
Thorpe, of skill and TGfU year 8 girls from one and post-intervention tests using than skill-based groups
1997 approaches secondary school AAPHERD basketball skill tests  Both students and teachers felt students were more
and the Henry–Friedel Field involved in planning and evaluation during TGfU les-
Hockey test, knowledge and sons
understanding test. A student  Teachers felt they had more opportunity to
affective domain questionnaire and observe and assess during TGfU lessons
teacher’s post-lesson question-
naires were analysed qualitatively
TGfU Turner and Comparison of TGfU 71 middle years Quantitative analysis of pre and post  While there were no significant differences for
Martinek, with a technique students being taught tests of hockey knowledge, skill dribbling or shooting decision making, students
1999 approach and a field hockey by a PE and game performance receiving TGfU instruction made better passing
control group specialist decisions
 Although the TGfU group scored higher than the
technique group for procedural knowledge, the
differences were not significantly different
 Students in the TGfU group exhibited significantly
better control and passing execution during post-test

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game play
 On most measures of game play the skill group did
not perform better than the control group
 There were no significant differences between the
groups on the accuracy component of the field skill
tests

(continued)
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

TGfU Kirk et al., Describe what happens Year 8 PE class doing a Qualitative analysis of three critical  The extent to which players were able to perceive
2000 when a TGfU basketball unit incident vignettes cues for action in the physical environment was a key
approach was factor limiting task performance
implemented in Year  Recognising appropriate cues at least in part
8 PE triggers ‘‘remembering those strategies’’
 It is important players develop declarative and
procedural knowledge and technical competence
 Tasks need to connect with students’ emerging
understanding of the strategies and tactics
 Students taught from the TGfU perspective develop
declarative knowledge of strategies early in the
learning process, but that this knowledge is not
necessarily transformed into procedural knowledge,
even when the technical demands of the task are
simplified
TGfU Turner et al., The meaning middle Nine students from two Qualitative analysis of open ended  The constructed meaning of skilfulness centred
2001 school students Year 6 and one Year interviews around tactical understanding and decision

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constructed for the 7 class divided into making . . . how skills are used tactically in the game
concept of skilfulness three teaching to achieve the purpose of the game
in the game of field groups were  Students consistently referred to vision as a key skill
hockey taught within purposefully sampled element
the games for  Students defined personal success in terms of game
understanding play performance
instructional context

(continued)

47
48
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

TGfU Harvey, 2003 Examine whether TGfU 16 participants aged 16– Players performance in a modified  Student game performance and game involvement
could be utilised to 18 involved in a game situation was quantitatively were reported as improved. It was suggested that the
improve specific soccer development analysed from video before, during TGfU approach has the potential to improve
aspects of game squad and after the intervention involvement and performance in team sport by
involvement and increasing decision making capacities in order to
performance in execute more effective skills and less ineffective
soccer
TGfU Cruz, 2004 Investigate teachers’ and 5 secondary PE teachers Post-team handball unit teaching  Teachers held positive views on the TGfU approach
students’ perceptions and their students interviews and end-of-unit student  Students indicated they had learnt more about
towards the questionnaire tactics and rules of the game
implementation of
TGfU
TGfU Henninger Examine novice Four college students Qualitative analysis of transcribed  Novices bring domain-specific knowledge into PE
et al., volleyball players’ enrolled in an talk-aloud and written protocol classes and sport settings but have difficulty using that
2006 domain-specific elective volleyball responses knowledge to generate tactical plans to use in game
knowledge and how class play
it is used to make  Teachers and coaches must create learning envir-
tactical decisions onments that allow students/athletes to develop their

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tactical decision making within game play contexts
TGfU Harvey et al., Assess changes in 144 Year 6 PE students Quantitative analysis of self-reported  There are positive associations between students’
2009 student perceptions (four classes) questionnaires assessing the affec- self-reported perception of their involvement in PE
of involvement in a tive domain classes utilising TGfU
unit of soccer using  Significant increases in learning and effort
the TGfU approach  TGfU can effectively engage students regardless of
skill level

(continued)
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

TGfU Harvey et al., Assess a practice- 34 soccer players from a Quantitative analysis of a pre-  Support for the notion that a practice-referenced
2010 referenced approach high school soccer observation and baseline assess- approach as a viable framework for assessing learning
for TGfU evaluation, programme ment followed by an 8-week with TGfU in the context to which it applied
test game perfor- intervention phase with three  Game-situated teaching and learning (aligned prac-
mance using the assessments using video capture of ticed) led to faster responses and quicker reactions
GPAI, assess how game performance within the game environment off the ball and thus an
align of practice con- improvement in the numbers of appropriate game
tributed to game responses
performance
TGfU Jones et al., Examine the impact of 194 Year 9 students Intrinsic motivation inventory was  Affective experiences can be significantly enhanced
2010 TGfU vs. a from three schools administered pre and post through TGfU
Traditional skills- were assigned to one intervention  TGfU a meaningful and valued games pedagogy,
based approach on of the treatment especially for girls
intrinsic motivation conditions
TGfU Gray and Investigate the effects a 52 secondary students Student focus group interviews, pre  No significant difference between groups post
Sproule, tactical teaching and the two teachers and post-intervention game video intervention in terms of on-the-ball skills
2011 approach had on analysis, student questionnaire  Skill-based group believed decision-making ability

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game knowledge, had deteriorated, game-based group believed on-the-
game playing ball and off-the-ball decision making had improved
performance and  The game performance data demonstrated that the
pupil perception of game-based group made significantly more good
decision-making decisions on and off the ball
ability

(continued)

49
50
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

TGfU Broek et al., Investigate the decision- 122 university students Quantitative analysis of the tactical  The tactical knowledge of the student-centred
2011 making process of doing a volleyball awareness scores with testing instructional group with tactical questioning
three instructional practical course phases (pre-test, post test, reten- improved significantly more than the two other
groups (teacher- divided into six tion test) within instructional instructional groups
centred, student- training groups group (teacher-centred, student-
centred with tactical centred with tactical questioning
questioning and stu- and student-centred without tac-
dent centred without tical questioning) and gender (male
tactical questioning) and female) as factors. Students
in volleyball were assessed using a volleyball-
specific Tactical Awareness Test
TGfU Balakrishnan Investigate whether Four Year 5 PE classes in All groups tested for initial game  Significant mean difference between TGfU approach
et al., tactical learning one school: two performance using a GPAI as a pre and traditional skill approach groups
2011 outcomes can be classes randomly test score. After the instruction  TGfU approach improved primary PE students
improved with the assigned as control period the GPAI was readminis- learning outcome
TGfU approach groups and two tered as a post test
classes as the
experimental groups
Game Sense Jones and Transfer of knowledge Two classes of year 8, Quantitative study. Students were  Students in the experimental group had better
Farrow, between games in the one group the tested on decision making and decision-making skills and decision-making speed than

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1999 same category control and the other decision making speed in badmin- the control group
the experimental ton during game play. The control  There was no appreciable difference in skill level
group group undertook a rugby unit between the two groups
while the experimental group  Tactical understanding of the experimental group
undertook a volleyball unit. All was significantly better than the control group
students were reassessed on
decision making and decision
making speed in badminton.

(continued)
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

Game Sense Brooker Implementing Game Two PE teachers and a Qualitative study. Video of each of  Limited understanding of the conceptual aspects of a
et al., Sense as a new co-educational Year the five lessons and an audio sport is a constraint upon teacher confidence in the
2000 approach to games 8 class doing a bas- transcript, informal interviews enactment of a Game Sense approach
teaching ketball unit with selected students during  Where Game Sense is an unfamiliar approach
lessons, and teacher reflective teachers may initially feel de-skilled and need to
journals revisit planning skills
 Student perceptions about the value of playing a
modified game vs. playing the ‘real’ game influence the
successful introduction of a Game Sense approach
Game Sense Light, 2004 Examines practicing Six participants Qualitative analysis of participant Strengths of a Game Sense approach
coaches experience interviews - Developing off-the-ball play
with Game Sense in a - Training that replicates game conditions that results
range of sports in transfer from training to the game
played from - Creating independent decision makers
introductory to elite - Player motivation
level Challenges of a Game Sense approach
- Change in the coach-player relationship
- The aesthetics of training changes such that training
doesn’t ‘look’ right as it is less ordered
- Time constraints as it was perceived that a GS

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approach takes longer to get results
Game Sense Austin et al., Fundamental movement One pre-service gener- Action research implemented over a  Students improved in skill level for the FMS of the
2004 skills alist primary school 6-week period with pre and post kick
(K-6) pre-service assessment of FMS proficiency  The Game Sense approach provided an effective
teacher and a Year 3 using checklists from the Get method of gaining and maintaining student interest in
co-educational class Skilled: Get Active package, stu- the participation and performance of the kick in the
of 28 students dent self and peer checklists and context of soccer
information sheets, and teacher
observation sheets

(continued)

51
52
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

Game Sense Chen and Game sense pedagogy Year 6 students co- Qualitative Case Study, 9 weeks one  Significant change for the better in the eight ‘less
Light, capacity to promote educational class of lesson/week. Interpretative sporty’ students attitudes toward cricket and softball
2006 more positive 30 students analysis of all-class questionnaires,  Significant improvement in social relations within
attitudes toward one-on-one interviews with eight the class and in the students’ game play
sport students, observation and student
drawings
Game Sense Pill, 2011a Teacher engagement 64 teachers Qualitative analysis of web survey  Game sense thought to be most applicable to senior
with TGfU Game years (Year 11 and 12) PE
Sense in Australia  Small-sided games and ‘questioning as pedagogy’ not
seen as distinctive to a Game Sense approach
 Game Sense game categories did not feature in
curriculum planning
 Game Sense yet to be fully understood and
implemented
Tactical Games Mitchell Relative effectiveness of One class of Year 6 Pre and post tests of knowledge and  Students in the tactical group had higher
approach et al., tactical and skill- taught by a tactical game performance, and an percentages of game involvement
1995 based approaches approach, another assessment of motivation by the  No significant differences between the tactical and
Year 6 class Taught Intrinsic Motivation Inventory technical groups for most skill execution measures
by the same teacher and decision making

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but using a skill-based
approach
Tactical Games Berkowitz, Practitioner reflection A teachers personal Reflective writing  The teacher believed a TGA enabled her to achieve
approach 1996 on the change from reflection on ‘more’ and that student game play improvement and
skill-based teaching changing teaching game understanding during play was more apparent
to tactical-based approach than when the teacher had used a skill-based
teaching approach

(continued)
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

Tactical Games Mitchell and To address the question 21 students randomly Pre and post intervention video tap-  Tactical understanding improved during badminton
approach Oslin, of whether tactical selected from Year 9 ping of badminton singles play. instruction and this improvement was sustained
1999 understanding Badminton instruction was fol- during pickleball
transfers across lowed by pickle ball instruction.
games in the net Decision making during game play
games category was assessed using a GPAI
Tactical Games Harrison Tactic vs. skill teaching 182 beginning university Quantitative analysis. AAHPERD  Both skill teaching and tactical instruction produced
Approach et al., instruction volleyball students in (1969) volleyball skill test, coding improvement on skill tests, self-efficacy, knowledge
2004 six classes divided video of game trials, self-efficacy and game play
into high, medium scales, knowledge test.  Students can improve significantly with either skill
and low-skilled ability teaching or a tactical model as long as the teacher
groups creates a positive learning environment
Tactical Games Martin, 2004 To determine whether 36 randomly selected Quantitative analysis of pre and post  Tactical understanding improved during the
approach tactical Year 6 students assessment of decision making ultimate Frisbee unit and was sustained into the team
understanding from video of ultimate frisbee handball unit
transfers across game play using GPAI. Two
games in the invasion structured questionnaires
games category provided to 10 randomly selected
students during the team handball

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unit, and all students were
videotaped in team handball game
play.
Tactical Games Wallhead Investigate the effects of 218 students aged 10– Pre and post intervention measures  The pedagogy of the TGA seemed to foster non-
approach and a TGA on students 16 from 11 schools of student enjoyment and per- threatening level of challenge to students such that
Deglan, motivational (13 classes) ceived effort, competence and the students enjoyed the experience of mastering the
2004 response learning were obtained tactical dimensions of the game and are motivated to
engage within games-based activities

(continued)

53
54
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

Tactical Games Lee and Examine the effects of Four students from each The dependent variable ‘supporting  Substantive improvement of supporting behaviours
approach Ward, technique-focussed of three middle movement’ was coded from during tactic-focussed instruction than during
2009 and tactic-focussed school PE classes observation of video of technique-focussed instruction of supporting move-
instructional condi- were observed. Two instructional and match games ment for low-skilled females and males, and for
tions on the learning classes with a average-skilled females
of a tactic tactical-focussed
intervention and a
third class acting as
the control
Tactical Games Townsend Determine the levels of Six selected students Qualitative analysis of pre and post  Students cognitively understand tactics before they
approach et al., tactical motor and from a Year 4 class, tests of tactical skill and cognitive could successfully execute them
2009 cognitive learning two students within understanding, end-of-lesson ‘free  Students enjoyed a tactical approach because they
each skill level – high, writes’, students interviews and played games and practised with team-mates, but did
middle, low researcher journal not enjoy the time spent listening during questioning
periods
 Students as young as Year 4 can succeed in a tactical
approach, but teachers must attend to pertinent
questioning techniques

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Tactical Games Bohler, 2009 Investigating the Tactical Two middle school Year Qualitative analysis of structured  A tactical game model may contribute to student
approach Games model 6 PE teachers and student pre and post unit tactical understanding and may enhance student
their combined interviews, descriptive field notes, decision making and game performance
classes undertaking a video and audio taped  Unit length is a constraint on student development
volleyball unit performances, student think aloud of deeper and more sophisticated knowledge
reports during games, and a structures
situational knowledge quiz

(continued)
Table 2 (continued)

Study Author/s Focus Participants and setting Data source Findings

Play Practice Holt et al., Transfer of learning Six university students Quantitative analysis of video  When players performed above 70% appropriate
2006 from play practices rated low to recorded performances responses in practice performance, games improved.
to game play in moderate soccer The rationale for preceding 3v2 practice with a 2v1
soccer playing ability was not supported by the findings
 With regard to lower ability participants, if the
underlying skills were not initially present in the
performers’ repertoire, then play practice was not
sufficient to improve performance in practice, or to
make the skills effective in games (p. 114).
Games Fry et al., Evaluate whether 304 upper primary Qualitative analysis of a 6-item open  Majority of students reported heightened interest
Competency 2010 children perceive students inventory and engagement with learning
Approach GCA as adding value  Some children were not ready to increase their
to their PE understanding and engagement in problem solving
experience and decision-making tasks that develop game sense
Tactical Alarcon Analyse the effects of a 10 male participants Quantitative analysis of pre test and  Between the pre test and the post test the number
Decision et al., tactical training with an average age then post test of the experimental of times that there were two simultaneous team
Making 2009 programme on of 21 and an average group after a 7-month training actions (movements on both sides of the player with
passing decision accumulated programme the ball) in support of the player with the ball that
making during real experience of 8 years favoured the pass increased (5% to 73.6% of

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games occasions)
Invasion Games Tallir et al., Examine the impact of 97 primary school Decision making and memory tests  The more efficient acquisition of decision-making
Competency 2003 the IGCM and a children from four were administered five times, pre knowledge in the ICGM condition
Model traditional approach classes of two and post instruction, and three  Better retention scores of the pupils in the tradi-
to teaching basketball primary schools. times during the instruction weeks tional condition
Classes were
randomly assigned to
either IGCM or
traditional teaching
conditions

55
56 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

focus on this area of research as it is a separate line of inquiry to the perspective of the practitioner
pursued in this paper.
The historical overview earlier in this paper engaged with the first categories of papers. The
discussion to follow will include an analysis of this history of TGfU and substantially engage with the
results of the third type of publication, the data driven research. It is always difficult to determine
when to stop searching and how many articles to include in a review (Wallhead and O’Sullivan,
2005). Two parameters defined the boundaries of the search and subsequently the analysis and sub-
stantive discussion later in this paper: Firstly, the issue of ‘how many’ publications to consider for the
review. The peer-reviewed data-based articles were limited to teacher and sport coaches enactment
of TGfU pedagogy and students’ experiences of this enactment. Non-empirical articles that did not
introduce new questions or directions for TGfU were not included in the review. Secondly, the
review did not consider research of pre-service teachers’ experiences of learning to teach using a
TGfU approach as it was felt that although related, this is a separate area of inquiry to the one pursued
in this paper.

Data driven research. Table 2 summarises the empirical-scientific research as it applies to TGfU and
its variations for the teaching of games and sport. It shows a variety of research practices are
engaged in the exploration of the assertions for TGfU pedagogy and student learning outcomes.
The information contained in Table 2 will be considered in the discussion.

Results and discussion


Proliferation of TGfU
The proliferation of the TGfU and its subsequent iterations suggests that practitioners and
researchers across various countries see potential in the approach for enhanced student learning
and engagement in games and sport teaching. This suggests its potential as a pedagogical model
through which to achieve the game skill development, both tactical and motor development,
content standards of curricula. In Australia, the potential of Game Sense as a sport pedagogy is
recognised in the Play for Life philosophy and pedagogy of the Australian Sports Commission
(Schembri, 2005) and within coach education (Australian Sports Commission, 1999).
While most of theoretical descriptions and pedagogical descriptions of the TGfU inter-
pretations reviewed remained grounded in the demonstration of game play behaviours, central to
the ‘reason for being’ of all TGfU versions is positioning game understanding as a valued part of
skill learning. Also central is the notion that game skill is best developed in circumstances that
most closely represent the situations in which the skills will be used (Thorpe and Bunker, 2010).
Game Sense provided something of a ‘hook for PE teachers to hang on to’ as the vision of the
outcome of teaching for understanding, but the nature of ‘understanding’ remains theoretically
blurred within TGfU and its subsequent iterations. This omission was initially addressed by the-
orising TGfU as a form of social constructivism, commonly referred to in the literature as ‘situated
learning’ (Dyson et al., 2004; Griffin et al., 2005; Kirk et al., 2000; Kirk and MacPhail, 2002;
Penney, 2003). However, constructivism is a collective term for two types of constructivist
learning theory – social constructivism and cognitive constructivism. The construction of under-
standing, as a product of cognition, is in many ways unique to the individual who experiences the
world. Cognitive constructivism, with its emphasis on mental models or schemas created and
refined by experience (Eggen and Kauchak, 2006), would also seem applicable to the whole notion

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Stolz and Pill 57

of ‘understanding’ as defined in TGfU literature. This aspect of ‘understanding’ is highlighted by


Wiggins (1998).
According to Wiggins (1998), teaching for understanding is substantially about a shift in the
paradigm of instruction from memorising and practising to one of thinking and acting flexibly with
deep conceptual and procedural knowledge in new and novel situations. The various TGfU
approaches certainly advocate for this type of shift. What none of the nuanced versions of TGfU
address substantially, and what is largely absent from the data driven research (Table 2) is what is
generally acknowledged as the goal of understanding; that is, deep engagement with knowledge,
and the individual intellectual models that are subsequently refined to enable more flexible and
adaptive behaviour (Perkins, 1993a, 1993b; Perkins and Blythe, 1994; Wiske, 1998). As Richard
and Wallian (2005) noted, ‘Constructivism asks for students to engage in activities that require
higher level of thinking and reflective processes. Ultimately, students must demonstrate their
understanding by applying the new knowledge in new situations’ (p. 21). While the data-driven
TGfU research initially focussed on a ‘tactical vs. technical’ theme, and later a practitioner-
referenced methodology (see for example Table 2), what is missing is research focussed on student
demonstration of higher level of thinking and the application of new knowledge in new situations.
Research consideration of the nature of TGfU game appreciation and understanding as expres-
sions of cognitive flexibility and creativity is required to substantiate claims made about TGfU for
games and sport learning. Further, research into the nature of levels of understanding, recognising
that understanding develops by degrees through the acquisition of a sequence of progressively more
complex and encompassing concepts (Newton, 2000), may assist a more concrete conceptualisation
of TGfU in practice. This is especially so for clarifying the nature of game ‘understanding’ and
‘appreciation’, central to the distinctiveness of TGfU and its nuanced variations.
From the historical account of TGfU’s global development it can be seen that differences
between each approach are frequently so subtle that demarcation of these distinctions may not
serve any practical pedagogical purpose. What can be suggested from a meta-analysis of the the-
oretical writing covered in the literature review is that each interpretation of TGfU has added to the
original proposition in areas that were conceptually or theoretical absent or under represented. For
example, the Tactical Games approach (Mitchell et al., 2006) explains how to differentiate teach-
ing for understanding at different levels of sport development, something missing from the original
TGfU proposition (Bunker and Thorpe, 1982). The Tactical Games approach also introduced the
GPAI as a tool to assess game sense as both on-the-ball and off-the-ball behaviour, addressing the
area of holistic game play assessment.
The Game Sense approach has developed into a differentiated expression of games teaching,
from fundamental sport skill development through to situational game play and play practices
focussed on specific game outcomes. Game Sense has also provided an attempted explanation of
what game understanding means. From a sport pedagogy perspective, the Game Sense proposition
is not tactical before technical, but tactical and technical accentuated in a game-centred learning
context that should typify sport games pedagogy. The emergence of a dynamic motor skill theory,
where games are viewed as complex adaptive systems defined by constraints (Davids et al., 2005;
Renshaw et al., 2010) within which game behaviours arise, suggests that representative situations
that link information with movement are best for skill learning, which is synonymous with den
Duyn’s (1997) explanation of Game Sense as a sport pedagogy (refer to Figure 2). Perhaps, there-
fore, there is some substance to Almond’s (2010) suggestion that Game Sense is an important
dimension of a revised TGfU and Thorpe’s explanation that Game Sense goes further than the orig-
inal TGfU, and does not hide the philosophy of TGfU behind a simple description of lesson

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58 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

structure (Thorpe, 2006). However, as with other nuanced interpretations of TGfU, the challenge
remains to demonstrate the efficacy of Game Sense as sport games pedagogy (Table 2).
Dynamic systems theory constraints-led practice contains similar propositions to Game Sense.
It has been identified as non-linear pedagogy to distinguish it from an information-processing
model of skill learning and linear ‘progressive part’ pedagogy. The idea of a non-linear pedagogy
has been linked to TGfU, providing the theoretical skill acquisition ‘muscle’ missing in TGfU the-
oretical literature (Chow et al., 2007; Davids et al., 2005; Renshaw et al., 2010). However, as Fig-
ure 3 illustrates, TGfU is cyclical in nature; however, it remains linear in that it is represented as a
progressive 1-to-6 six-step cycle. Similarly, the Tactical Games approach is represented as a cycle,
simplifying the six-step TGfU cycle (Figure 3) to a 1-to-3 three-step cycle (Mitchell et al., 2006)
(Figure 1). Bunker and Thorpe (1986) even stressed that the sequential aspects of the TGfU model
‘are critical’ (1986: 10). This is unlike the definition of Game Sense (Figure 2), which links knowing
what to do with the ability to put that knowledge into action as skilled performance, and therefore
appears more synonymous with the iterative nature of the dynamics of non-linear pedagogy.
The data reviewed in Table 2 illustrate that the concepts of game literacy (Mandigo and Holt,
2004) and game intelligence (McCormick, 2009; Wein 2001) are useful to explain the aims of a
TGfU approach and to further define Game Sense. Some of these key characteristic descriptors in
Game Sense and game intelligence claim to develop student game performance are as follows:

 knowledge and understanding of how to read patterns of play


 possession of technical and tactical skills
 ability to set up appropriate, creative, flexible and adaptive responses when necessary
 understand game rules and its impacts on game play
 know how to create structural and tactical similarities and differences between games
 experience positive motivational states in games through developed confidence in coordina-
tion and control of movement responses
 opportunity to reflect on the application of specialised skills in games and suggest strategies
for improvement

Whether the TGfU nuances across the iterations described in the earlier historical overview are
substantial enough to make a significant difference to the way teachers approach games and sport
teaching is debatable, and it may simply be a case of ‘same mountain – different path’ (Mitchell,
2005). What is evidenced, however, is that there emerged competing game–sport for understanding
discourses in the literature, each vying for dominance and seeking research validation (Table 2),
but essentially promoting the same curriculum substance. This ‘pegging of the ground’ for aca-
demic work may be sensible from a research context; however, whether the nuanced boundaries
hinder or help the distribution of TGfU pedagogy to PE teachers for enhanced student games and
sport learning requires investigation. Almond (2010) alluded to this in his summation that TGfU
has not been as readily accepted by teachers as it has by academics.
Teachers may not see TGfU pedagogy as distinctive, and the pedagogy is simply part of the
repertoire of necessary pedagogical practice (Pill, 2011a). The review of the theoretical literature
also revealed small-sided games, game modifications to shape and focus learning, the use of ques-
tions to develop game appreciation and understanding of a target concept, and game categories are
not of themselves unique to a TGfU approach. For example, described earlier in the paper was
Mosston’s 1960s explanation of the application of instructional strategies to achieve specific learn-
ing objectives in his spectrum of teaching approaches (Mosston and Ashworth, 2002). Also noted

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Stolz and Pill 59

earlier, games frameworks with similar pedagogical intentions to TGfU had been espoused but did
not capture attention and subsequent interest in the way that TGfU did (Findlay, 1982; Mauldon
and Redfern. 1969). If there is uniqueness to TGfU it may be one of emphasis and the associated
discourse, which reframes games and sport teaching from a behaviourist teacher-centred frame-
work defined by a focus on direct teaching to a constructivist learner-centre framework defined
by the foregrounding of cognition in the development of playing competency (Light and Fawns,
2003). However, as Rink (2010: 38) suggested, ‘TGfU doesn’t have a monopoly on constructi-
vism’. TGfU’s reframing of motor skill-to-game teaching (or ‘sport-as-techniques’) (Kirk,
2010) through closed-to-open progressive part pedagogy to game-appreciation-to-motor skill
teaching appears to be the pedagogical distinctiveness of the original TGfU proposition.
From a pedagogical perspective, the distinctiveness of TGfU and many of its nuanced inter-
pretations may only substantially lie in this ‘flipped’ classroom. The term ‘flipped’ is used to give
effect to the essential difference between a traditional PE method (Metzler, 2011) and TGfU
approach. Where the traditional PE method progressed by drill and emphasis on direct teaching to a
game, a TGfU approach starts with the game as its organisational and instructional centre (Metzler,
2011). A TGfU lesson progresses from the game to other instructional strategies to further develop
aspects of play, and then these enhancements are anticipated in the next engagement with game
play. TGfU iterations can then be understood as a shift in praxis from traditional linear motor
learning theories to an understanding that reflects complexity and systems theory (Davids et al.,
2005, Renshaw et al., 2010).

Proceed with ‘caution’: divergent approaches and contradictory conclusions


Kirk and MacPhail (2002), in discussing TGfU research, make the point that from around the 1980s
onwards TGfU ‘began to be scrutinized empirically by researchers’ in the form of comparing TGfU
either with a technique or tactical approach (See for example Table 2: Mitchell and Oslin, 1999;
Mitchell et al., 1995; Turner and Martinek, 1999). Rink et al. (1996a) noted from their review of six
studies (Gabriele and Maxwell, 1995; Griffin et al., 1995; McPherson, 1991, 1992; McPherson and
French, 1991; Mitchell et al., 1995; Turner and Martinek, 1992, 1995) done in the area of ‘peda-
gogical research’ appear to be ‘conflicting’ in parts due to the differences in research design. They
argued that part of the reason for the inconclusive support for TGfU over either technique or tactical
approaches to teaching was primarily due to the difficulties in comparing different sports chosen for
the research, the age of the participants, the length of time, the type of teaching paradigm or model
adopted in the research, the variables chosen to measure and how they were measured (Rink et al,
1996a). Studies from Table 2 that have a specific empirical-scientific focus (like Alarcon et al., 2009;
Broek et al., 2011; French, et al., 1996; Harrison et al., 2004; Harvey, 2003; Harvey et al., 2009,
2010; Holt et al., 2006; Jones and Farrow, 1999; Martin, 2004; Turner and Martinek, 1999) would
appear to reinforce Rink et al.’s (1996a) earlier claims surrounding ‘conflicting’ findings due to
research design. It appears little has changed in TGfU research since Rink et al. (1996a) made those
claims. For instance, Turner and Martinek (1999) compare TGfU with a technique approach and a
control group and found that there was no significant difference between these groups. More telling
was the claim by one study (Holt et al., 2006) that unless there was an underlying skill level profi-
ciency then the ‘Play Practice’ approach (Launder, 2001) was not sufficient to improve game perfor-
mance. The meta-analysis of the data driven research (Table 2) illustrates the contradictory nature of
the claims on behalf of a TGfU approach.

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60 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

One thing that seems to be consistent in each study is the differences surrounding what ‘learning’ is
being measured. The range of instruments used in each study, from pre and post skill tests, observations
of game play, decision-making capacity (and so on) emphasise that individual performance in game
situations is a central feature in their notions of learning that each research is trying to capture.
It is important to note that it is difficult to synthesis all of the studies summarised in Table 2
because of the variation in design. The change in research emphasis over time from ‘tactical vs.
technical’ teaching to practitioner referenced research is also telling. The difficulty of synthesis of
early TGfU research suggested was noted by Rink et al. (1996a). This research early in the life of
TGfU concluded that research investigating the merits of TGfU and other similar approaches to
teaching games and sport in PE was prone to ambiguity because the variables analysed were mul-
tiple and not standardised, leading to contradictory results that were unreliable. More telling was
Rink et al.,’s (1996b) controversial claim that it was possible for students to pick up tactics without
direct instruction or teaching within the traditional or skill-based approach, which contradicts the
TGfU idea that skills can be acquired through indirect (Hopper and Kruisselbrink, 2001; Mcfadyen
and Bailey, 2002; Rink, 2010) teaching methods. Since Rink’s claims, Game Sense (1997), Play
Practice (2001) and the Tactical Game Approach (1997) emerged as well articulated variations of
the pedagogical intention to teach games or sport for understanding. However, as the data sum-
marised in Table 2 indicate, the challenge of meta-analysis of TGfU research remains due to the
methodological variation in TGfU research.
Rink controversially claimed that ‘there does not seem to be any affective advantage to any of the
approaches’ when effective teachers are used (Rink et al., 1996b: 493). Also telling is the claim made
by Rink (2001) that most of the research surrounding teaching and learning in PE seems to be framed
around establishing ‘direct links’ between what a teacher ‘does’ and question begging assumptions
about ‘how’ students learn. Hence why Rink (2010: 40 ff) ‘cautions’ us that ‘simplistic and linear
models’ cannot capture and explain ‘complex, situational and sometimes chaotic’ nature of move-
ment settings due to the influence of ‘constraints’ on student performance that include all physical,
environmental and task characteristics. Certainly the second and third constraints are arguably the
most important to PE practitioners due to the direct control they can exercise over these. Much of the
initial data driven research (see for example Table 2) uses different study designs in order to deter-
mine which task constraints can empower learning, such as comparing tactical and/or technique
approaches against control groups. There was some evidence that students from a tactical teaching
focus group had enhanced game understanding compared with control and skill focussed groups, but
as the data in Table 2 showed the results are not consistent across all studies.
The alleged failure of the traditional and/or the need for the TGfU approach may arguably have
more to do with the poor quality of games and sport teaching employed in PE (Alexander and
Luckman, 2001; Locke, 1992; Siedentop, 1994) and school PE that is irrelevant or boring for
adolescents (Ennis, 1999; McKenzie et al., 1994; Rikard and Banville, 2006; Smith and Parr, 2007;
Tinning and Fitzclarence, 1992). Decisions about which approach to adopt are possibly more likely
to be philosophical (Green, 1998, 2000, 2002; McMorris, 1998) and not a choice based on empirical-
scientific evidence, especially where that is inconclusive and the method narrative confused by com-
peting nuanced interpretations of essentially the same curriculum and pedagogical emphasis.
The data driven TGfU research (Table 2) indicates that teachers struggle with TGfU pedagogi-
cal intentions and the pedagogical content knowledge required of a TGfU approach. The limits of
teachers conceptual understanding of sport constrains teachers enactment of TGfU and confidence
with the approach (Brooker et al., 2000), and for most of the teachers involved in the research, the
TGfU variation used was new or unfamiliar to them. A TGfU approach requires ‘considerable

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pedagogical skill . . . and teaching with this method is more of a challenge’ (Turner, 2005:73). PE
teachers are generally more experienced with a ‘sport-as-techniques’ (Kirk, 2010) approach, and
after three decades of TGfU research the ‘TGfU movement’ (Butler and Griffin, 2010: 4) can only
claim that ‘teachers value certain aspects of the public theories defined in the textbooks and formal
teacher preparation curricula and develop unique interpretations of the models representative of
their students’ needs, their personal beliefs about sport and games, and their teaching contexts’
(Butler and Griffin, 2010: 9). The problem as we see it has more to do with the notion that ‘good
pedagogical’ practice in PE may seem like the kind of activities that may be the product of
empirical-scientific generalisations to which much of this research aspires; however, much of this
work is simply unable to capture the constantly changing nuances of ‘real-life’ teaching engage-
ment. We do not deny that practitioners may have something to learn from empirical-scientific or
pedagogical research, but the question as we see it is has more to do with determining whether this
type of research does, or ever could, present us with a picture of pedagogy in PE which is complete
such that there could no longer be any meaningful question outside this picture. The question posed
is not asked out of hostility towards empirical-scientific research. Far from it; in fact, it is the nature
of pedagogy itself which forces us to ask this question.
If teachers and researchers can take little of pedagogical value from the scientific-empirical
research (Table 2) the general advice would seem to suggest a ‘flexible’ approach to teaching in games
and sport in PE, which could vary from TGfU and other approaches as long as the approach adopted is
conducive to achieving the nominated learning objective, rather than a single overriding approach or
style (Capel, 2000). Indeed, Bunker and Thorpe (1982) did not rule in or out a style or instructional
strategy in achieving the objective of game competency. The overriding ideal of practice being game
centred directs teacher objectives to teach for understanding and student engagement, as the ‘game
first’ intention works with student motivation in PE: that is, to play (Bunker and Thorpe, 1982). The
historical literature review demonstrated that TGfU instinctively ‘makes sense’ as ‘simply good peda-
gogy’ (Hopper et al., 2009) to many academics. However, if TGfU is to be ‘pedestaled’ as a preferred
pedagogy for ‘performance, participation and enjoyment’ (Light, 2013) then re-articulation of the
cycle of learning (Figure 1) to be non-linear, reflective of dynamic constraints-led practice, and a more
meaningful representation of what it means to ‘understand’ games and sport is necessary. To this end,
PE pedagogues and sport skill acquisition researchers should be working more closely together to find
the common ground in ideas and their expression.

From linear to non-linear theories of games teaching in PE


It has been argued elsewhere (Rink, 2010; Stolz and Pill, 2012) that a problem with the traditional
approach to teaching games and sport in PE is an overemphasis on the psychomotor domain to the
detriment of the cognitive and affective domains of learning. The TGfU approach is an attempt to
rebalance the disproportionate emphasis on the psychomotor domain because it focusses on
developing thinking players (den Duyn, 1997) who can apply their learning in a variety of
situations. For instance, the problem with teaching a volleyball forearm pass in isolation is that it
does not automatically equate with the contextual application of the pass to set up an attack or a
successful solution to a game problem that arises in complex environments in which movement
patterns are executed. In fact, the traditional approach teaches it out of context (Kirk, 2010;
O’Connor, 2006; Rovegno, 1995), and herein lies most of the nuanced differences that exist
between the traditional and TGfU approaches.

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62 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

There is much more to playing games and sports than learning a motor skill in isolation (Chow
et al., 2007; Davids et al., 2005; Renshaw et al., 2010). The idea that one must learn and master a
skill first in simple environments before playing a game in some type of linear fashion is pro-
blematic because it decontextualises the skill into something that, for the learner, may have no
connection with sporting or game environments, and in essence teaches these movements outside
of any real meaning. A TGfU approach is more purposefully directed toward educating the learner
within the context in which the technique is performed, whereas the traditional approach is more
interested in the performance or execution of technique.
The research findings summarised in Table 2 illustrate that it is problematic to make definitive
statements about the efficacy of a TGfU approach because the rhetorical generalisations of the type
found in the literature in the earlier historical overview of TGfU can be of little or no use to prac-
titioners. They simply have no relevance to the ‘natural setting’ of each practitioner (Brooker et al.,
2000). This point has been made quite strongly by Elliott (1989), who argued that pedagogical and
teacher expertise is context specific, and so the generalities of educational research which ignore
contextual features thereby have little or no use to practitioners. This was further reinforced by
Nuthall (2004), who argued that reducing the teaching–learning process to generalisations leaves
little to no relevance to the professional knowledge of the practitioner. For instance, what may work
in one class or with one particular student does not mean that it will necessarily equate to it working
in other contexts, different curriculum content, different kinds of students and so on.
In the context of games teaching in PE, it is not too hard to see how views of learning may be
misconstrued in terms of an acquisition of a skill or based on some behavioural analysis of a
movement event. The problem as we see it is that pedagogy is often linked to a basically scientific
conception of learning and thereby presumed available to empirical-scientific testing of the effective-
ness of models of pedagogical practice. One of the core issues with this is that such research strives to
be universal for all practitioners, and in doing so gives rise to abstraction or generalisation that can
have little or no application to the reality of what goes on within classroom practice. Hence why a
shift from a scientific-technical perception of research in action as ‘technical vs. tactical’ in the 1990s
begins to be repositioned to practitioner referenced research in the 2000s, in what Brooker et al.,
(2000) described as research occurring in the ‘naturalistic setting’ of the PE teaching context.

Some future considerations and concluding comments


According to Carr (1986, 2003), if a child can be encouraged in the right direction to explore their
natural innate curiosity and interest with respect to the world then the student will learn irrespective
what teaching strategy or method is adopted. This means that the pedagogical emphasis first needs
to be on bringing the learner to see the value and significance of what is being offered to them to
learn. Questions surrounding direct or indirect teaching strategies, whether to start with teaching
technique followed by tactical decision making (or vice versa) later and so on, must always remain
subservient to bringing the learner to see the value and significance of what is being offered to
them to learn. TGfU’s central emphasis on appreciating the game may be its most relevant pro-
position for learner engagement, which can be addressed through a ‘naturalistic setting’ (Brooker
et al., 2000) and ‘situated learning’ (Kirk and Macdonald, 1998; Kirk and MacPhail, 2002), and
peripheral participation within ‘communities of practice’ (Kirk and Kinchin, 2003), which are
more authentic and meaningful experiences for students, as well as building on students’ prior
knowledge (Dodds et al., 2001) that has the potential to ‘transform’ games and sport in PE.

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Competing descriptions of TGfU within the PE literature and its applications are problematic to the
physical educator within the school environment because teacher practitioners do not necessarily see
or want to see the same boundaries between pedagogical models’ as researchers do as theory gen-
erators. Subsequently, if TGfU is to have any relevance for teacher practitioners of PE, more emphasis
needs to be placed on the normative characteristics of pedagogy that drives this practice of teaching for
understanding within curricula. Future research should continue a practice-referenced approach (Kirk,
2005), but extend past the end of single units of work to include longitudinal data collection aimed at
the objective of achieving student ‘understanding’, or perhaps the objective as game sense.
The literature review and discussion leads to four conclusions. First, there is an implied division
between researcher as theory generator and teacher practitioner as theory applier. Second, competing
descriptions of TGfU in PE literature complicate understanding of the approach and its practical
implementation. Third, the application of TGfU and its nuanced versions, such as the Tactical Games
approach (Mitchell et al., 2006), are problematic to the teacher practitioner within school contexts
because theory guides the means in which to achieve the ends. Unless there is a clear explanation of the
nature of the ends themselves there is no theory applier, no organiser to regulate the pedagogical practice.
Fourth, perhaps this is where the original description of Game Sense as observable game intelligence
leads the TGfU discourse for an answer to the nature of the end purpose, or objective of teaching for
understanding – Game Sense (Charlesworth, 1993; den Duyn, 1997; Thorpe and West, 1969).
The argument that the scientific conception of learning that is available to empirical-scientific
testing of the effectiveness of various pedagogical methods is problematic and ill conceived, and
seems to originate in the notion that since PE activities are overt then they are also measurable (Met-
zler, 1986), has also been tested in this paper. The shift from empirical-scientific research to
practitioner-referenced research is in tune with what Bishop (1992) described as the pedagogue tra-
dition concerned with exploring classroom practicalities, the curriculum and teachers responses to
the curriculum as it ‘naturally’ occurs. This is because good educational practice evades conventional
empirical-scientific research and cannot capture the complex nature of teacher deliberations in a
codified way. For instance, there are some true educational generalisations in pedagogy, such as
‘never face the board when talking to the class’; however, these do not need statistical support to
confirm or disprove such a statement. The research paradigm difficulty has more to do with the nor-
mative characteristics of education and teaching practice and the incompatible nature of the
empirical-scientific approach which attempts to make causal connections and predictions. Conse-
quently, some educational questions are simply irresolvable by empirical-scientific means, may not
be normatively resolvable and are a matter for philosophical argument (Carr, 2001).
The empirical-scientific research as it applies to TGfU and its variations for the teaching of games and
sport reviewed for this paper indicated that the central tenet of TGfU – teaching for understanding –
remains unresolved. Investigating the development and demonstration of performance of understanding
as the active use of knowledge (Perkins, 1992) is suggested. The implications and student outcomes of a
PE, sport and games curriculum that is thought demanding, taking students beyond what they already
know by building up performances of understanding through generative knowledge (Perkins, 1992,
1993a, 1993b), should be a future pedagogical research agenda so that pedagogy in PE again becomes
a central practical issue of a sport and games teaching in PE for understanding. This is suggested to bridge
the disparity between researcher as theory generator and teacher practitioner as theory applier.

Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments and suggestions to improve
this paper.

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64 European Physical Education Review 20(1)

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Author biographies
Steven Stolz is a Lecturer in the Faculty of Education at La Trobe University, Australia.

Shane Pill is a Senior Lecturer in Physical Education Studies at Flinders University, Australia.

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